>> Interesting, but I’m unsure if all of it is significantly better than just using the guard that is effectively inside of the operator/func that is being proposed:
>>>> guard let value = Int("NotANumber") else { throw InitializerError.invalidString }
>>>> That is a pretty damn compelling argument.
For some cases, yes. For others…
myInt = Int("NotANumber") ?? throw InitializerError.invalidString
On the other hand, all we really need is a generalized "noneMap" function marked as rethrowing, which can serve multiple purposes.
myOtherInt = Int("NotANumber").noneMap(arc4random)
myInt = try Int("NotANumber").noneMap { throw InitializerError.invalidString }
On the gripping hand: I think this is only a problem because `throw` is a statement, not an expression. Could it be changed to be an expression with an unspecified return type? I believe that would allow you to simply drop it into the right side of a ?? operator, and anywhere else you might want it (boolean operators, for instance).
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Brent Royal-Gordon
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